“Time’s up,” the slogan of the Hollywood antiharassment movement, has a very different meaning for Louis Farrakhan.

At his annual Saviours’ Day conference in Chicago last weekend, the Nation of Islam leader boasted, “And Farrakhan, by God’s grace, has pulled the cover off of that Satanic Jew, and I’m here to say your time is up, your world is through.”

Syndicated Columnist

The notion of due process has been much in the news, thanks to President Trump, whose devotion to fairness is characteristically situational: He’s all for due process when it comes to alleged spouse abusers or sexual harassers; less so, maybe, for gun owners. But as is too often true in the age of Trump, the president’s antics eclipse our capacity to focus on anything not specifically Trump-related. In recent days, that includes an allbut-ignored Supreme Court ruling that should worry anyone who believes in the importance of due process.

“Darkest Hour” follows Winston Churchill’s struggle to rouse Britain to confront the Nazi menace. Winning the war was step two. Step one, the movie’s theme, was to get the country to agree to wage war.

And he did no buttering. “I have nothing to offer,” Churchill famously told his nation, “but blood, toil, tears and sweat.” And that’s what it got as the price for saving civilization.

DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend, “Al,” and I have been together for two years off and on. We dated casually for six months before we decided to be exclusive. Unbeknownst to him, I was also sleeping with someone else, “Brandon.”

Al and I had a fight and broke up for a few months, and during that time I slept with another good friend of mine, “Marc.” When Marc and I decided it wasn’t serious and moved on, Al and I got back together.

It is one of the dirty habits of our political discourse that so many people use thermonuclear rhetorical weapons as a first resort. It is not enough for defenders of gun rights to be wrong; they must be complicit in murder. It is not enough for gun-control advocates to be mistaken; they must be jackbooted thugs laying the groundwork for tyranny.

Ruth Marcus Syndicated Columnist

Ivanka Trump tells us — tells NBC’s Peter Alexander, to be precise — that it is a “pretty inappropriate question to ask a daughter” whether she believes her father’s alleged, and denied, sexual abuse and harassment. “I know my father,” she added. “So I think I have that right as a daughter to believe my father.”